13 Wend. 453 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1835
By the Court,
The reference in this case was made under that provision of the Revised Statutes which authorizes executors or administrators, when they doubt the justice of any claim presented against the estate which they may represent, to- enter into an agreement in writing, with the claimant, to refer the matter in controversy to three disinterested persons, to be approved by the surrogate. 2 R. S. 88,
The statute makes no provision for pleadings in such cases. The agreement to refer is the commencement of the suit It must present substantially the issue between the parties, stating the claim upon one side, and the denial of its justice on the other; it is a substitute for declaration and plea. Questions of some difficulty may yet arise upon the construction and operation of this statute, but it is not necessary to anticipate them. The agreement to submit, in this case, states the nature and extent of the plaintiffs’ claims, and the character in which they present them, with as much precision as an ordinary declaration in assumpsit; and it contains a general denial of the justice of those claims, on the part of the defendant. It is to be considered a part of the record, as much as though it were in form a declaration.
The plaintiffs are some of the heirs at law of Peter Woodin deceased, being the sons and son-in-law of his deceased son Daniel Woodin. The defendant Bagley is the executor of Hannah Woodin, the widow of Peter j and the plaintiffs allege that Peter Woodin died in possession of certain personal property, which, at his death, went into the possession of his widow, and remained in her possession, with the exception of some articles which she sold, until her death in 1832, when they came to the defendant as her executor. The plaintiffs, as heirs at Zaro of Peter Woodin, claim to recover their proportion of this property. The defendant contends that in that
If the plaintiffs could not have maintained this action in its present form, immediately after the death of Peter Woodin, can the time which has since elapsed have increased or changed their powers or rights in this respect ? It can have this effect only by raising the presumption that all the debts due from the estate have been paid, and that whatever of the personalty remains, belongs to the next of kin, free and discharged from all claims upon it. But admitting this to be a legitimate conclusion from the lapse of time, the formal objection still remains—that the personalty can be recovered only in the name of the administrator or other personal representa
The report is certainly erroneous in charging the defendant with costs. He reduced materially the plaintiffs’ claim, which is satisfactory evidence that there was nothing unreasonable in his refusal or neglect to pay the demand; and, in such cases, an executor or administrator is not liable for costs. 2 R. S. 90. 5 Wendell, 74. 6 id. 554. Robert v. Ditmas, 7 Wendell, 522.
The statute of limitations, I apprehend, might also be effectually interposed against the claim.
Report of referees set aside.-